The front page of the Internet, also known as the social news community reddit had seen its fair share of ups and downs over the years, but in September of last year, many in its community saw a silver lining when its owner, Conde Nast, spun it out as a standalone site, and recruited co-founder Alexis Ohanian to sit on its new board of directors.

As it so happens, when reddit became a (somewhat more) independent entity in September, it also launched a search for a CEO to lead the site to infinity and beyond. Today, reddit is finally announcing the hiring of (what I believe) is its first CEO, Yishan Wong. In a blog post to the reddit community today, Wong said of hearing of the hunt for a CEO:

I’d be lying if I said that it didn’t immediately cross my mind to imagine what it would be like to do that job. I’d left my previous company (Facebook) over a year ago and been doing random startup consulting ever since … So imagine my surprise when two days later, I was contacted asking if I was interested in talking about the position … At first, I didn’t really quite believe I was a serious candidate. It didn’t seem real, and I knew that I didn’t match the profile of what you might consider (or so I thought) a CEO candidate. I don’t have the polish and the poise and the schmoozing, and I don’t play golf.

The new CEO’s Facebook profile officially lists his name as Yishan “Sparklepants” Wong, so there’s little doubt that, in spite of his lacking proficiency at golf, he’ll fit right in at reddit. And while Wong may not have experience as a chief executive, Wong was formerly the Director of Engineering at Facebook, where he worked as an early employee from 2005 to 2010, helping to build Facebook’s engineering staff into the army it is today.

As part of his new role as CEO, Wong reiterated that reddit has established a new board, including Ohanian, along with revamping its capital structure to allow the company “to manage its own finances and operations, including the ability to provide competitive equity compensation to its employees, which [it hasn’t] been able to do in the past.”

Wong says that these moves were made so that the company can gain further flexibility and get full control over its resources, as it works to meet the demands of its growing user base. That being said, the new CEO is not looking to make sweeping changes to the community itself:

I’m not looking to step in and make “big, bold changes” – I think reddit is great, and the team has a lot of good features already in the pipeline to improve functionality for users and mods, help with subreddit discovery, improve the API, and help bring reddit to more people – so the primary goal for my first few months is to listen and try to learn as much as I can about the details of the product and the community.